Thursday 29 January 2015

ndm

Bloomberg switches off comments in website redesign


Bloomberg.com

The Bloomberg website has taken out the comments bit, so individuals would have to have their say through social media instead. 

  • Bloomberg has removed the option to comment on its stories after a relaunch of its flagship business website.
  • A spokeswoman for Bloomberg declined to comment on the removal of comments, but it is understood the company believes the conversation about its content is better served on social media rather than on its own platform. 
  • It is understood the impact of switching off comments will be monitored to see if it should be made policy. 
  • Bloomberg’s new site aims to bring together content from the media company’s digital, print, television, radio and live event operations
  • It’s faster, smarter, and frankly bigger than anything we’ve done before – and it’s uniquely digital, built for a global web audience, and designed to deliver the right news at the right time,” Topolsky said. 
This website taking out the comments section is a way of becoming popular on social media so if people have a say then they can find the site on Twitter or Facebook. 


ndm

Seven things we learned from Facebook's latest financial results

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/29/seven-things-learned-facebook-financial-results-video-oculus-rift 

Facebook has gained many users and throughout the years has been expanding. The video aspect is growing and the use of Facebook has increased due to smartphone usage. 

  • Watch out, YouTube: Facebook is parking its tanks on your lawn. “Video grew significantly this year, to an average of more than 3bn video views per day on Facebook,” said Zuckerberg.
  • “Today, over 50% of people in the US who come to Facebook daily watch at least one video per day and globally over 65% of Facebook video views occur on mobile,” said the chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg.
  • Facebook had 1.19 billion mobile monthly active users in the final quarter of 2014, which equates to more than 85% of its total users, and it counts 745 million people as mobile daily active users.
  • A user in the US or Canada was worth $9 in the final quarter of 2014, but Europeans were only worth $3.45 and users in Asia-Pacific $1.27. Users in the rest of the world including Africa and Latin America – which is the big potential growth area – were only worth 94 cents.
This article shows the growth and innovation of Facebook throughout the years. 

Saturday 24 January 2015

Riot questions


1.      The selection of images created a stereotypical representation of youths as they were shown in ‘chav’ clothing such as track suits and the background of the images were filled with vandalism e.g. buildings on fire and shops being smashed up.
2.      David Buckingham mentions Owen Jones because he believes youngsters behaving in the way they did during the riots shows a strong perception of the working class which is a perception that is demonising.
3.      The 2005 IPSOS/MORI survey found that 40% of articles involving young people were about crime or violence. Also 71% could be having a negative tone.
4.      Stanley Cohen says that the coverage by the media of the riots talked up a disturbance and an even bigger moral panic.
5.      The elements of media and popular culture that were blamed for the riots were: rap music, violent computer games and reality TV shows.
6.      Social media was blamed as people used sites such as Facebook and Twitter to communicate on whether to riot and to join people to groups. Also by using Blackberry messenger which was popular at the time. During the Arab spring the use of social media was seen as a good thing by the Western media as people were going against the bad in their country.
7.      The two-step flow theory links as the rioters using social media were seen as the opinion leaders, therefore those who wanted to follow took action on what these people had to say.
8.      Henry Jenkins sees this as a decline of power by the media giants as democratisation is now coming into action and I also agree because individuals showed their power in freedom of expression through social media sites.
9.      The right wing response was that the rioters were all uneducated and had not been taught by their parents very much and do not have any sort of respect and do not know what they were doing. They were also compared to being animals.
10.   The left wing response suggested it was to do with poverty and unprivileged youths with horrible backgrounds. Also to do with cuts in youth services and the removal of education maintenance allowance.
11.   I believe the main cause of the riots was that it gave youngsters an excuse to loot and act immorally.
12.   Capitalism can be blamed for the riots as money is the goal for everyone and individuals saw this as an opportunity to loot as many valuables as they could.
13.   People involved in the riots hardly got a chance to explain themselves in the media.
14.   The causes happen to be opportunism, lack of money, unemployment, an increase in student tuition fees and how they felt they were treated compared with others.
15.   I believe that the solution to solving issues is not violence and the rioters caused a lot of damage and were quite unintelligent to take part and I believe that most of their intentions were only to steal and damage for the fun of it and to act ‘cool’. Therefore there should be harsh prison sentences.

 

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/23/twitter-verified-users-photos-instagram

Twitter encourages 'verified' users to stop posting photos from Instagram

Twitter warning to celebrities

This article is about how Twitter urges consumers to stop posting pictures through Instagram and to instead use their development to post images onto Twitter.

  • Twitter has taken the unusual step of interrupting high-profile users within its own app, to suggest they stop posting photos from Instagram to the social network
  • A number of Twitter’s ‘verified’ users – accounts held by celebrities, brands and other public figures, including journalists – received the in-app alert, which reminded them to “post your photos directly on Twitter to make sure your fans always see them”.
  • Instagram photos haven’t been displayed within tweets since December 2012, when the company switched off its integration with Twitter’s “cards” system, in an attempt to drive more traffic to the Instagram website.
  • The move could be seen as defensiveness on Twitter’s part: when Instagram announced that it had more than 300 million active users in December 2014, most reports chose to compare that figure to Twitter’s most recent milestone of 284 million.
The integration of both social media sites was a good idea as it promoted each site, helping them gain more users.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/media-network/2015/jan/21/social-media-engagement-tv-ratings-fremantle

Social engagement now more important than TV ratings, says Fremantle boss


This article is about how social media is generated through shows such as Britains Got Talent and is more important than the show viewer ratings. The industry is showing a shift towards social media.

  • Hindle – chief executive of digital and branded entertainment at the production giant behind The X Factor, Britain’s Got Talent and American Idol – said that the level of social engagement that shows drive has superseded TV ratings as the most important indicator of content’s success in the eyes of advertisers.
  • TV “would be here for a long time” but described the change as a significant turning point for an industry in which social engagement would have been treated as an afterthought five years ago: “No longer is it: here’s a content idea we’re going to make, let’s produce it, put it up and then let’s think about the social engagement around it.”
  • “A few years ago, the only things that mattered was ratings. Now what matters more is the level of social engagement around the content.”
This shows that social media has now become very powerful in determining how popular a show can be.


Monday 19 January 2015

Learner response

The internet happens to be a more democratic space as according to an article written by The Guardian, social media sites such as Facebook are supporting the French in the recent terrorist attacks against them. Facebook owner Mark Zuckerburg supports freedom of speech and says social media should be used to express opinions, in contrast he also believes there should be censorship as it may not be safe for individuals to express certain opinions which are a reason why the French were targeted by terrorists for their right of speech. Therefore the internet is a place for democracy to flourish even though it can be dangerous for individuals which suggests “the internet is an empowering tool”-Al Gore. The internet is empowering as it enables consumers to act as the decision maker on whether to act out on other peoples opinions which was the case with the French magazine 'Charlie'. 

Sunday 18 January 2015

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/14/facebook-at-work-social-network-launches-pilot-for-companies

Facebook at Work: social network unveils 'pilot' for companies

 Facebook at Work is launching for iOS and Android initially.

This article is about how people could be using Facebook at work, however now involving personal profiles of individuals.

  • Many companies still ban staff from accessing Facebook during office hours, but the social network is hoping to win over the corporate critics with Facebook at Work, a version of its service designed for use within companies.
  • The new service launched on Wednesday as a test for “pilot partners”, whose employees will be able to download the Facebook at Work mobile application for iOS or Android devices, as well as using its website.
  • It is Facebook’s move to compete with existing workplace communication and collaboration tools from big technology companies like Google and Microsoft, as well as from emerging startups like Slack.
  • The executive in charge of Facebook at Work is the company’s director of engineering Lars Rasmussen, who joined Facebook in 2010 from Google, where he played a key role in the launch of its Google Maps service.
These days this idea of using social media at work could change things as new and digital media is on the rise. So companies should follow the movement and look into the future of social media and new technology.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/16/buzzfeed-public-chat-messaging-app-viber

BuzzFeed launches its own 'public chat' channel in messaging app Viber

Viber's BuzzFeed deal sits alongside its growing emphasis on celebrities.

The online news site has partnered up with 'weChat' and has opened there new public chat service on Viber.
  • Online news site BuzzFeed’s initial growth may have been fuelled by social networks Facebook and Twitter, but its next frontier is likely to be messaging apps like its latest partner, Viber.
  • BuzzFeed has launched a “public chat” channel within the app, which is owned by Japanese internet giant Rakuten, and which has more than 209 million monthly active users.
  • WeChat and Viber may soon be joined by another high-profile messaging app as a partner for BuzzFeed. In November, it was named as one of the media companies in talks with photo and video messaging app Snapchat about serving stories to a new section of its app called Discover.
Buzzfeed has the ability to expand as it has partnered up with Viber and has launched a new chat service which could rival whatsapp.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/media/media-blog/2015/jan/16/bbc-news-online-to-overhaul-website-and-app

BBC News online to overhaul website and app

BBC mobile site

This article is about BBC news online to launch an updated version of their website which is suitable for accessing through smart phones and tablets as there is a rise in the use of new technology.

  • 50-60% of all visits in the UK come from mobile or tablet users and that the current BBC website wasn’t designed with such users in mind. “The existing product, whilst very successful, has remained largely unchanged for the past three or four years.”
  • The new app, for Android and iOS, is currently being tested by 2,000 users and Pembrooke says surveys of the current app, which is four years old, have “[told] us that people now expect more from the app, especially the range of content it offers”.
  • The new app is expected to launch in January and will provide more video content, improved photo galleries and video playback as well as a “my news” section that will allow users to personalise their news stream. Pembrooke explained: “[Following] topics will initially be limited to users of the mobile app. If this proves to be a popular feature then we will look to extend this to work across the app and website so that your ‘my news’ section [will be available] across devices.”
  • We need a cost effective solution that works for everyone, on all devices.”

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/15/social-media-use-does-not-increase-stress-study-claims

Social media use 'does not increase stress', study claims 

social media logos on keyboard

This article is about a study that suggests social media does not cause as much stress as the non-users of social media but happen to be more aware of stress' in their friends lives.
 
  • However, social media users are more aware of stressful events experienced by their online friends, which has been described as the “cost of caring”.
  • The research also found that women who use Twitter, email and share digital pictures on a daily basis score 21% lower on the stress measure used in the study compared with those who did not communicate digitally
  • “The social aspect of these technologies makes people more aware of stressful events in others’ lives. Learning about and being reminded of undesirable events in other people’s lives makes people feel more stress themselves. This finding about the cost of caring adds to the evidence that stress can be contagious.”
This shows however social media can cause stress by finding out certain things in others lives if not their own stresses. Therefore there are positives and negatives about social media.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/15/mark-zuckerberg-facebook-charlie-hebdo

Mark Zuckerberg defends censorship policies despite Charlie Hebdo support

Facebook likes free speech, according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg

This article is about Mark Zuckerberg supporting freedom of speech through Facebook however agrees that censorship is still needed to avoid outrage.

  • Zuckerberg’s status update on 9 January promising “a service where you can speak freely without fear of violence”
  • He was asked why he had spoken out about the Charlie Hebdo attack, but not about other violent events around the world, including in Iraq and Palestine.
    “It wasn’t just a terrorist attack about just trying to do some damage and make people afraid and hurt people. This was specifically about people’s freedom of expression and ability to say what they want,” said Zuckerberg.
  • Although he took pains to stress that all terrorist incidents are “really horrible”, Zuckerberg said he spoke out about Charlie Hebdo because he saw it as an attack of freedom of expression, and so particularly relevant to Facebook.
  • Zuckerberg said that Facebook resists breaking the law in countries purely on a point of principle of defending free speech.

Monday 12 January 2015

Ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jan/08/apple-10bn-payouts-ios-apps-2014

Developers made $10bn from iOS apps in 2014

Apple’s App Store set new records in 2014

This article is about how Apple product owners purchased the most apps in 2014 helping the company gain $10 billion in profit.

  • In January 2014, Apple said that iOS users had spent more than $10bn on apps and in-app purchases in 2013 
  • Apple’s 30% revenue share of all apps spending means it earned an additional $4.3bn from sales of iOS apps in 2014, plus sales of its own range of iOS apps. 
  • Apple paid out $10bn to developers of apps for its iPhone and iPad in 2014, taking its total paid out since its App Store’s launch in 2008 to $25bn. 
  • pple ended 2012 having paid out $7bn to iOS developers, then $15bn by the end of 2013, and now $25bn by the end of 2014. 
  • The company said that New Year’s Day 2015 was its single biggest day of App Store sales since the store launched. 
This shows how much individuals rely on technology using apps for business, entertainment and social media. 

Sunday 4 January 2015

NDM Summary


  1. 12/09/14 Fault in our stars, 
  2. 12/09/14 Petition for Obama
  3. 12/09/14 Top 100 Youtube Channels
  4. 15/09/14 YouTube stars and Facebook, 
  5. 15/09/14 Game:Destiny- huge profit,
  6. 15/09/14 iPhone 6 release
  7. 22/09/14 Sexism at freshers week,
  8. 22/09/14 website: Alibaba worth more than Google?  
  9. 26/09/14 Twitter targets film advertising,
  10. 26/09/14 Problems with iPhone 6
  11. 06/10/14 Sky ‘saddened’ over death of alleged McCann troll
  12. 08/10/14 UK viewers ‘spend five hours a week viewing TV, clips and films online’
  13. 08/10/14 BBC iPlayer catch-up window extended to 30 days
  14. 08/10/14 Last.fm made loss of £2.1m last year
  15. 10/10/14 Cassetteboy parodies
  16. 13/10/14 Can Twitter make money out of breaking news or is it a PR platform?
  17. 23/10/14 Twitter changes: 20 hits and misses from the social network's history 
  18. 23/10/14 Is UKIP winning on Facebook and Twitter? 
  19. 23/10/14 Facebook pays no UK corporation tax for a second year
  20. 23/10/14 Media jobs website Gorkana sold to Cision in £200m deal  
  21. 7/11/14 John Lewis christmas advert 
  22. 7/11/14 get over newspapers dying out 
  23. 17/11/14Cost of pay for TV channels
  24. 17/11/14Facebook introducing 'Facebook for Work'
  25. 23/11/14 Social media to get a job
  26. 23/11/14 Print in decline
  27.  04/12/14 Twitter unveils new system for reporting abuse
  28.  04/12/14 Google and Facebook dominate digital market
  29.  04/12/14 Tesco joins retail stampede -social media
  30.  04/12/14 Cancer research trends
  31.  05/12/14 More than half of ads are digital
  32.  05/12/14 Twitters reaction to politics 
  33.  18/12/14 Reading print bids a farewell to print
  34.  18/12/14 220 Journalists jailed
  35.  03/01/15 Who’s taking control this year? Google, BBC, Facebook, or even North Korea?
  36.  03/01/15 From YouTube to Facebook – will video be the one to watch in 2015?
  37.  03/01/15 The virtues of Vice: how punk magazine was transformed into media giant 
  38.  03/01/15 Arrested over twitter threats
  39.  12/01/15 Developers made $10bn from iOS apps in 2014
  40.  16/01/15 Mark Zuckerburg defends Facebook
  41.  16/01/15 social media doesnt cause stress
  42.  16/01/15 BBC news online to overhaul website and app 
  43.  18/01/15 BuzzFeed launches its own 'public chat' channel in messaging app Viber
  44.  18/01/15 Using Facebook at work 
  45.  24/01/15 Social engagement now more important than TV ratings, says Fremantle boss
  46.  24/01/15 Twitter encourages 'verified' users to stop posting photos from Instagram
  47.  29/01/15 Seven things we learned from Facebook's latest financial results
  48.  29/01/15 Bloomberg switches off comments in website redesign
  49.  08/02/15 Twitters latest financial results
  50.  08/02/15 Snapchat helps Daily Mail and Vice Media get on message with youngsters

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jan/01/st-louis-man-arrested-twitter-threats-police

St Louis man arrested over alleged Twitter threats against police

st louis protest

This article is about a man who posted threatening tweets on Twitter aimed at the police which he was arrested for.
  • accused of 10 counts of making a terrorist threat, a felony punishable by up to seven years in prison in Missouri. The charges relate to 10 tweets that Valentine, 35, is alleged to have posted in December with the intention of “frightening 10 or more people”.
  • According to the probable cause statement, Valentine “admits to using the Twitter user handle @jdstl314 and being the sole poster under that user handle”. The account has since been suspended and cannot be viewed. Police said Twitter suspended it on 29 December.
This shows how powerful social media is. People take to Twitter to express the way they feel and give their opinions, as Twitter is used so widely they can get caught out in a matter of seconds and there is no hiding from it.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/jan/01/virtues-of-vice-magazine-transformed-into-global-giant

The virtues of Vice: how punk magazine was transformed into media giant

Vice media London office

This article is about how a magazine called Vice became very well known with the media giants such as Google and HBO. This punk magazine aimed to get through to young people as they believed they could connect with them better than Disney channel or News Corp.

  • But how? Vice, with its gonzo-style journalism and access-all-areas attitude (typical headline: I Went Undercover in America’s Toughest Prison), is not easy to define. Yet it has somehow come to define a new media age of shareable video content, mostly because of its success – real or perceived – among young people
  • With 11 digital channels ranging from Vice News to Motherboard (“covering cultural happenings in technology”), Noisey (“a music discovery channel”), a food channel called Munchies, a TV studio and film division, and a record label, as well as the tie-ups with YouTube, HBO and China Daily, Vice has a more diverse business model compared with, say, Channel 4, which offers advertisers slots around specific content at specific times.
  • Vice, which bills itself as “the coolest magazine in the world”, launched a UK edition in 2002 and now operates in 35 countries, becoming a multimedia company in the early part of the century.
  • “It’s made by young people for young people. If our journalists are scared, that makes it into the film. What our journalists are feeling is a huge part of our vernacular.”
Vice will keep growing in my opinion as nowadays the younger audience wants to get involved as they are beginning to understand issue more and more. Vice helps the younger generation to engage with the news they provide be it in a serious or jokey way.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/jan/04/youtube-facebook-video-year-ahead

From YouTube to Facebook – will video be the one to watch in 2015?
"Camp Takota" Exclusive Sneak Peek Party 

This article is about how 2015 is going to change how media institutions spend their money. There will be more merging with other companies and growing brands. Video was the theme of 2014 and will probably continue to be so.
  • Expect more investments in 2015 from Channel 4, which has set up a growth fund to help support emerging indies who want to retain their independence.
  • A couple of trends will continue that have been going on for some time. The most obvious thing is the demand for physical newspapers. The second is the rate of growth in digital may slow down and plateau.
  • The biggest challenge goes back to the scale of newspapers. How much income is actually coming in and what kind of scale of newsroom can the publisher afford to run? Five to ten years from now will we have the same number of large operations in play?
  • There’s no better time than now to be a big YouTube star: in 2015, the mainstream media will continue to recognise that these individuals have massive audiences, and the potential to move and activate those massive audiences. Someone like Grace Helbig is going to have her own late-night talk show on [TV channel] E! next year.
  • Listening to radio through the television will continue to plateau, while internet radio will continue its solid, though unremarkable, growth.
Each type of media platform will continue to grow with a few innovations made, this will involve merging or investing in companies and buying ideas of each other. There will be massive competition in each platform especially TV.

ndm

http://www.theguardian.com/media/media-blog/2015/jan/04/google-facebook-bbc-north-korea-control-media-industry

Who’s taking control this year? Google, BBC, Facebook, or even North Korea?

The Interview

This article is about how digital media is changing significantly and that anything is possible in 2015, social media sites are converging and news stories happen to get around very fast. Social media is taking over the media institution.

  • It is a reasonable assumption that in 2015 we will see a further convergence between social media platforms and media practice. As the owners of Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram accept that they are not just “neutral platforms”, but actually shaping and controlling media, as well as owning and supporting a great deal of it.
  • Netflix has been a powerful exemplar of how to both be taken seriously by venture capitalists and get a seat at the Emmys. Jeff Bezos had so much money from founding Amazon, he actually bought a newspaper (the Washington Post). Pierre Omidyar, the eBay billionaire, is so earnestly serious about creating a new type of news organisation that his various setbacks with First Look Media will not stop him.
  • We are used to seeing a landscape which is divided between the big, global institutions and the small entrepreneurial start-ups. But we are still unused to the idea of true convergence: technology-driven markets that are fast-moving and fluid.
In my opinion I believe social media is taking over and this year we will see more innovation and possibly new famous apps such as snapchat.